Description

Periodically we do mass rebuilds of rawhide during the development cycle. This SOP will outline the steps necessary to do this.

Assumptions

This assumes that the mass rebuild has already been approved and scheduled via release engineering and FESCo. Coordinate with
infrastructure as well for any needed koji updates.

This also assumes that the mass rebuild does not need to be done in dependency order, and that the mass rebuild does not involve a ABI change.

Set up a web page for maintainers & send notice about rebuild

Firstly, describe the mass rebuild for maintainers; why it's being done, and how they can opt out. See the Fedora 12 example.

Secondly, send an email to fedora-devel mailing list about your next action. (Comment: this was missed for Fedora 14).

Update releng scripts

Release engineering scripts for mass rebuilds live in the releng git repository. You need
to edit the following scripts:

mass-rebuild.py

find-failures.py

mass-tag.py

need-rebuild.py

Change the following items:

the build tag, holding tag, and target tag should be updated to reflect the Fedora release you're building for

the 'epoch' tag should be updated to the point at which all features that the mass rebuild is for have landed in the build system (and a newRepo task completed with those features)

the comment which is inserted into spec changelogs

Create the rebuild holding tag

The add-tag command is used for creating the rebuild holding tag.

$ koji add-tag --help
Usage: koji add-tag [options] name
(Specify the --help global option for a list of other help options)
Options:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
--parent=PARENT Specify parent
--arches=ARCHES Specify arches

The options let you specify a parent for the holding tag.

For example, if we wanted to create a rebuild holding tag for Fedora 12 development we would issue:

koji add-tag --arches i686,x86_64 --parent dist-f12 dist-f12-rebuild

Create the rebuild target

The add-target command is used for creating the rebuild target.

$ koji add-target --help
Usage: koji add-target name build-tag <dest-tag>
(Specify the --help global option for a list of other help options)
Options:
-h, --help show this help message and exit

The arguments define the name of the target, the build-tag to use, and what tag to apply to builds as they complete. To continue our example, the following command would add the target for the Fedora 12 mass rebuild:

koji add-target dist-f12-rebuild dist-f12-build

When the dist-tag is not specified, it is assumed that the dist-tag is the same as the name of the target, in this case 'dist-f12-rebuild'.

Building the packages

The mass-rebuild.py script takes care of:

Discovering available packages in koji

Trimming out packages which have already been rebuilt

Checking out packages from git

Bumping the spec file

Committing the change

git tagging the change

Submitting the build request to Koji

The requirements for the script are as follows:

Ran as a user with a proper koji cert setup

Ran as a user with commit access to all packages

Ran as a user with a valid ssh agent for git actions

Ran on a system with a reliable network connection

The script has error checking at every step of the way and will gracefully recover and continue on with the next package. It does the rebuilds in an alphanumerical order (provided by python sorted()) by source package name, and it does a complete checkout, bump, commit, tag, and build one package at a time. The current bottleneck when mass rebuilding is the git server, but generally 4 packages per minute can be processed.

The script isn't very resource intensive, once it has discovered the available packages and trimmed out the things which have already been rebuilt. Those tasks require a fair amount of cpu time to process the XML data returned by koji. Once the script has moved on to the git, bump, tag, build phase the resource usage is light, mostly network to do the git checkouts.

Tips

It is highly recommended to use ssh socket sharing to speed up the git actions. This also obviates the need for an active ssh agent as all git connections will re-use the open socket. The Internet can tell you how to setup ssh socket sharing. Before starting the rebuild script, open an ssh connection to git.fedoraproject.org and prevent your shell from exiting due to idle timeout with export TMOUT=0 . Leave this connection open (like say in a screen session) for the entirety of the script run.

The script logs everything to stderr and stdout, so it is generally a good idea to redirect and capture the output to a log file, with something like 2>&1 | tee massbuild.out .

The most common failures are build failures, and there is a script to deal with those (find-failures.py) More on that later.

Outside of build failures, the rest of the failures happen leading up to the submission of the build, and can be tracked via the mass-rebuild script output. Any error that the script detects will be output to stderr and will contain the "failed" keyword. Searching the output can find these failures, which will look like:

Because stderr flushes immediately it may be hard to find the stdout that matches the error. However just repeating the command can often enough show you what is going on. Here is a list of common issues and the typical solution:

checkout failure: Module may not have been added to git yet, skip it.

spec check: Module may have been retired but not blocked from koji. Verify and block it.

bumpspec failed: Bump, commit, tag, build manually. Optionally fix the spec so that bumspec works in the future.

git tag failed: Most often this is due to NVR collisions with other branches or previous builds. Re-bump and commit/tag/build manually.

build submission failed: usually due to a koji or local network outage. Re-submit the build manually.

In all cases of fixing failures, verify that no newer build has been done in the mean time.

find-failures.py

This script will discover attempted builds that have failed, and then generate an html file that lists the failed builds (as a link to the build failure) and sorts them by package owner. It requires koji installed on the host it runs on.

As the build logs expire, this script is only useful for the first few weeks after the mass rebuild attempt.

This script should be setup to run often and the output put somewhere public. This can be tricky if you are running it and uploading the output via ssh as you will need either an active ssh agent or an open shared socket. The script is somewhat resource intensive as it processes a lot of XML from koji. Updating once an hour is reasonable.

need-rebuild.py

This script will discover packages that have a need to be rebuilt and haven't been yet. It will then generate an html file that lists the packages (as a link to the package page in koji) and sorts them by package owner. It requires koji installed on the host it runs on.

This script should be setup to run often and the output put somewhere public. This can be tricky if you are running it and uploading the output via ssh as you will need either an active ssh agent or an open shared socket. The script is somewhat resource intensive as it processes a lot of XML from koji. Updating once an hour is reasonable.

Tag the builds

Once the mass rebuild script completes, and all the pending builds have finished, the builds will need to be tagged. The mass-tag.py script will accomplish this task. The script will:

Discover completed builds

Trim out builds that are older than the latest build for a given package

Tag remaining builds into their final destination (without generating email)

The script is fairly fast. The longest time is taken processing the XML from koji to discover the builds and weed out builds that are not the latest. The final tag action is very quick. Output will go to stdout and should be saved for later review.

Consider Before Running

The most important thing to keep in mind while doing a mass rebuild is to communicate clearly what actions are being performed and the status of the rebuild.

Check in on scripts frequently to avoid a long stalled command from adding significant delays in completing the rebuild.

Red Hat, Red Hat Enterprise Linux, the Shadowman logo, and JBoss are trademarks or registered trademarks of
Red Hat, Inc. or its subsidiaries in the United States and other countries.
Linux® is the registered trademark of Linus Torvalds in the U.S. and other countries.
The Fedora Project is maintained and driven by the community and sponsored by Red Hat. This is a community
maintained site. Red Hat is not responsible for content.